Clearly people don't realize that mixed children that look predominantly black have black fathers and white mothers, but if the father is white and the mother is black it will be the other way around. For example, this is a picture of Eartha Kitt and her BIOLOGICAL daughter and her also biological granddaughter.

So, not saying she's not adopted, just saying it's possible for a biracial child to look caucasian.

Clearly you don't realize, you're full of sh*t. Bob Marley had a black mom and a white father and he was far more black looking than white looking. If you dont know what you're talking about, it's best to just STFU. When you have even the tiniest amount of admixture in the equation, the results/outcome is a complete toss up. Nothing more, nothing less.

Clearly you don't realize, you're full of sh*t. Bob Marley had a black mom and a white father and he was far more black looking than white looking. If you dont know what you're talking about, it's best to just STFU. When you have even the tiniest amount of admixture in the equation, the results/outcome is a complete toss up. Nothing more, nothing less.

I wasn't saying that's the only way it can happen, I'm saying that's usually how it happens, but I'm agreeing with you that it's a toss up. Don't get all huffy and puffy because I decided to share some knowledge and didn't word it how you thought I should've.

For those that don't know, his oldest two were from his ex-wife Debbie Rowe. Rowe was artificially inseminated with a white sperm donor, and Mike just basically bought the two kids off her. Blanket was adopted from Europe, I believe.

Clearly people don't realize that mixed children that look predominantly black have black fathers and white mothers, but if the father is white and the mother is black it will be the other way around. For example, this is a picture of Eartha Kitt and her BIOLOGICAL daughter and her also biological granddaughter.

Reginald Forman said:

I wasn't saying that's the only way it can happen, I'm saying that's usually how it happens, but I'm agreeing with you that it's a toss up. Don't get all huffy and puffy because I decided to share some knowledge and didn't word it how you thought I should've.

You pretty much did, no where in your original post did you state that you were speaking in generalizations or that there were exceptions to the rule etc. etc. You said "Clearly people don't realize that mixed children that look predominantly black have black fathers and white mothers, but if the father is white and the mother is black it will be the other way around."

There's a huge difference between saying usually (or in my personal experience) bm/ww = blacker looking and wm/bw = whiter looking. And saying " that mixed children that look predominantly black have black fathers and white mothers, but if the father is white and the mother is black it will be the other way around.", the former statement (hypothetically speaking) acknowledges the fact that you are generalizing and or speaking from personal experience. The latter comment (the one you actually wrote) in no shape or form states exceptions to the rule or anything of the matter. You said bm/ww = blacker looking and wm/bw = whiter looking like that was a concrete fact. Reading comprehension is key, and you lack that if you don't see the difference between what you said and my previous example (the hypothetical, that implies using words such as "usually" and or "in my personal experience").